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Mar 12, 2011
03/11
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move us all to a better place. and caltrate moves us. caltrate knows 80% of us don't get the calcium we need. and when we don't, our bodies steal it from our bones. caltrate helps put it back. with 1200 mg of calcium and 800 iu of vitamin d. women need caltrate. caltrate helps women keep moving because women move the world. caltrate helps women keep moving everything is better with swanson broth in it. an essential ingredient in any kitchen. swanson 100% natural chicken broth. inside the 2011 dodge journey is an 8.4-inch touch screen that lets you control the stereo volume, radio tuning, climate controls, turn-by-turn navigation, and bluetooth activation -- technology inside technology controlling more technology. welcome to the future. now lease the new 2011 dodge journey mainstreet for $299 a month for well-qualified lessees. >> couric: japan is no stranger to deadly earthquakes. the one that hit kobe in 1995 killed more than 6,000 people and in 1923, a quake started fires that destroyed much of tokyo, leaving 140,000 dead. but today's
move us all to a better place. and caltrate moves us. caltrate knows 80% of us don't get the calcium we need. and when we don't, our bodies steal it from our bones. caltrate helps put it back. with 1200 mg of calcium and 800 iu of vitamin d. women need caltrate. caltrate helps women keep moving because women move the world. caltrate helps women keep moving everything is better with swanson broth in it. an essential ingredient in any kitchen. swanson 100% natural chicken broth. inside the 2011...
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Mar 9, 2011
03/11
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"i trained for a couple of days and it's not hard to use it" he told us. the lightly-trained rebels have run into trouble in the last few days. down the road, government forces have retaken the town. state t.v. showed these pictures and this chilling statement by a qaddafi supporter: >> reporter: underlying the message, images of captured rebels face down on the ground. the clearest sign yet that this conflict has reached a dangerous new stage. mandy clark, cbs news, ras lanuf libya. >> couric: the trouble in libya has caused the price of gas here to soar. it's now up to an average of $3.52 a gallon. still, that's more than 50 cents less than the all-time high in 2008. back then, a lot of americans turned to mass transit to save money. but as ben tracy reports, commuters are finding a very different ride this time around. >> reporter: this is your 8:25 train? >> yup. >> reporter: okay, we'll hop on with you. >> okay. >> reporter: this morning in pasadena, california, we road the rails with jackie gilberto to downtown los angeles. she ditched her car. when
"i trained for a couple of days and it's not hard to use it" he told us. the lightly-trained rebels have run into trouble in the last few days. down the road, government forces have retaken the town. state t.v. showed these pictures and this chilling statement by a qaddafi supporter: >> reporter: underlying the message, images of captured rebels face down on the ground. the clearest sign yet that this conflict has reached a dangerous new stage. mandy clark, cbs news, ras lanuf...
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Mar 2, 2011
03/11
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what they want to show us and the places they want to show us. today we were able to get away with a single miner who said "you can go wherever you want and you can speak with whoever you encounter." we saw this bustling vegetable market and started asking away. how are things in tripoli? how are things in libya? >> everything is all right. >> reporter: everything is all right? >> everything is all right. no problem. >> reporter: it was a response we heard dozens of times today. >> very good. very good. >> reporter: while other parts of libya may be ready for civil war. that's not what you hear in tripoli. >> you want to make change, you want to make a revolution, i'm with you guys. but the problem, when you start burning your country, you start killing the people-- why's that? >> reporter: call it group- think. maybe towing the company line. they do start pretty young here. the little girl says "allah, qaddafi, libya, and that's it." >> no one else but moammar qaddafi. >> reporter: tripoli streets were bustling with shops and folks going to work
what they want to show us and the places they want to show us. today we were able to get away with a single miner who said "you can go wherever you want and you can speak with whoever you encounter." we saw this bustling vegetable market and started asking away. how are things in tripoli? how are things in libya? >> everything is all right. >> reporter: everything is all right? >> everything is all right. no problem. >> reporter: it was a response we heard...
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Mar 24, 2011
03/11
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. >> the 2010 census is showing us that latinos have become a national population, no longer concentrated in the traditional gateway states. in fact, i think the story of the 2010 census is the rise of the latino south. >> reporter: census figures show the south was also a magnet for african americans moving out of northern cities like detroit and chicago. the black population in north carolina grew 18% over the past decade. georgia 26%. florida 28% >> these are new younger blacks who don't remember a lot of the bad stuff that went on in the south years ago, who don't remember being shut out of the suburbs. they want to have it all, they want to go with the jobs are. they want to go where the good houses are. >> a equals d, b. >> reporter: the anderson family left detroit... left detroit for atlanta when their jobs looked uncertain. >> we got a job the same week. i got a job and then he got a job. >> reporter: census figures from the city they left behind are so startling detroit's mayor wants a recount. nearly 240,000 people moved away this past decade-- a quarter of the city's populatio
. >> the 2010 census is showing us that latinos have become a national population, no longer concentrated in the traditional gateway states. in fact, i think the story of the 2010 census is the rise of the latino south. >> reporter: census figures show the south was also a magnet for african americans moving out of northern cities like detroit and chicago. the black population in north carolina grew 18% over the past decade. georgia 26%. florida 28% >> these are new younger...
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Mar 15, 2011
03/11
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your doctor may use genetic tests to determine treatment. don't stop taking plavix without talking to your doctor as your risk of heart attack or stroke may increase. people with stomach ulcers or conditions that cause bleeding should not use plavix. taking plavix alone or with some other medicines, including aspirin, may increase bleeding risk, which can potentially be life threatening, so tell your doctor when planning surgery. tell your doctor all medicines you take, including aspirin, especially if you've had a stroke. if fever, unexplained weakness or confusion develops, tell your doctor promptly. these may be signs of ttp, a rare but potentially life-threatening condition, reported sometimes less than two weeks after starting plavix. it's your fault. naturally, blame the mucus. well, i can't breathe. did you try blowing your nose? of course. [ both ] and nothing came out. instead of blaming me, try new advil congestion relief. what you probably have is swelling due to nasal inflammation, not mucus. and this can help? it treats the real
your doctor may use genetic tests to determine treatment. don't stop taking plavix without talking to your doctor as your risk of heart attack or stroke may increase. people with stomach ulcers or conditions that cause bleeding should not use plavix. taking plavix alone or with some other medicines, including aspirin, may increase bleeding risk, which can potentially be life threatening, so tell your doctor when planning surgery. tell your doctor all medicines you take, including aspirin,...
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Mar 25, 2011
03/11
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that's what saved us. and though suddenly homeless and still lacking in basics like electricity, this community is thriving, exercising together, caring for each other's children and tending to medical needs as they find a way to cope with disaster. "it's a shock but it's no one's fault. it's the tsunami's fault" sato says. "we have to get on with our lives." here there is no blame, only perseverance and fellowship in the face of so much loss. lucy craft, cbs news, koizumi, japan. >> couric: and that is the "cbs evening news" for tonight. i'm katie couric. we leave you with a reminder of the friendship between japan and the united states, the cherry trees presented to washington, d.c. by the mayor of tokyo 99 years ago this weekend. now in full bloom. a delicate symbol of hope and rerule in. good night.,,,,,,
that's what saved us. and though suddenly homeless and still lacking in basics like electricity, this community is thriving, exercising together, caring for each other's children and tending to medical needs as they find a way to cope with disaster. "it's a shock but it's no one's fault. it's the tsunami's fault" sato says. "we have to get on with our lives." here there is no blame, only perseverance and fellowship in the face of so much loss. lucy craft, cbs news, koizumi,...
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Mar 18, 2011
03/11
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move us all to a better place. and caltrate moves us. caltrate knows 80% of us don't get the calcium we need. and when we don't, our bodies steal it from our bones. caltrate helps put it back. with 1200 mg of calcium and 800 iu of vitamin d. women need caltrate. caltrate helps women keep moving because women move the world. >> smith: finally tonight, when you see how the japanese people are suffering in the wake of a natural disaster, the reaction is to want to help. that's exactly what some kids are doing as mark strassmann reports. >> thank you so much! >> reporter: when tsunami relief on their minds, kids in dallas squeezed the aid from lemons. a lemonade fund-raiser for japan. in an hour they raised more than $1,000. >> people all wonder why we're doing this right now. >> reporter: in atlanta... >> it really makes me want to help those people. >> reporter: kindergartener tuesday muse saw the destruction on television. like kids all over, she's trying to make sense of the unthinkable. >> i was, like, how can i help? could i do a sale
move us all to a better place. and caltrate moves us. caltrate knows 80% of us don't get the calcium we need. and when we don't, our bodies steal it from our bones. caltrate helps put it back. with 1200 mg of calcium and 800 iu of vitamin d. women need caltrate. caltrate helps women keep moving because women move the world. >> smith: finally tonight, when you see how the japanese people are suffering in the wake of a natural disaster, the reaction is to want to help. that's exactly what...
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Mar 17, 2011
03/11
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the surge of water rushes in, sweeping away cars and debris along what used to be a major road. people watched from rooftops as the water rises. you can see that man there. and all the buildings behind him. but soon enough, not even the rooftops are safe, and in the span of two minutes, everything is washed away. it will be some time before we know the full cost of the disaster and lives and property. more than 8,000 people are still missing, and more than 416,000 have either lost their homes or been forced to evacuate them. ben tracy reports on the search for victims and the growing humanitarian crisis. >> reporter: for more than ten hours each day, they search the never-ending piles of wreckage near ofunato, japan. these are firefighters, 150 of them from los angeles and fairfax, virginia. they are looking for survivors, but in two days they have found just six people, all of them dead. the u.s. response to japan's disaster is growing. 17,000 military personnel, 14 ships, 113 helicopters, and the aircraft carrier "ronald reagan" are now in or on their way to the country. the a
the surge of water rushes in, sweeping away cars and debris along what used to be a major road. people watched from rooftops as the water rises. you can see that man there. and all the buildings behind him. but soon enough, not even the rooftops are safe, and in the span of two minutes, everything is washed away. it will be some time before we know the full cost of the disaster and lives and property. more than 8,000 people are still missing, and more than 416,000 have either lost their homes...
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Mar 22, 2011
03/11
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but jiahani tells us he just wants to see his besieged city finally free. the latest reports we're hearing is that there is fierce fighting going on in ajdabiya at the moment. the front line has been very fluid, moving several miles in a day. katie? >> couric: and, mandy, what's going on right now where you are in benghazi? >> well, the main concern here is pockets of rogue elements loyal to qaddafi that are doing hit-and-run attacks so rebels here have been beefing up security, adding more checkpoints in key locations. >> couric: mandy clark, as always, mandy, thank you so much. meanwhile, house speaker john boehner called on president obama today to make clear exactly what the mission in libya is and how it will be accomplished. david martin reports the president and the military tried to do just that. >> reporter: now in its third day, operation odyssey dawn gathered steam as aircraft from more and more countries joined american jets in enforcing a no- fly zone over libya. their mission is limited to stopping qaddafi from attacking his own people, but th
but jiahani tells us he just wants to see his besieged city finally free. the latest reports we're hearing is that there is fierce fighting going on in ajdabiya at the moment. the front line has been very fluid, moving several miles in a day. katie? >> couric: and, mandy, what's going on right now where you are in benghazi? >> well, the main concern here is pockets of rogue elements loyal to qaddafi that are doing hit-and-run attacks so rebels here have been beefing up security,...
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Mar 17, 2011
03/11
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move us all to a better place. and caltrate moves us. caltrate knows 80% of us don't get the calcium we need. and when we don't, our bodies steal it from our bones. caltrate helps put it back. with 1200 mg of calcium and 800 iu of vitamin d. women need caltrate. caltrate helps women keep moving because women move the world. >> couric: no one knows the destructive power of nuclear radiation better than the japanese. 65 years ago at the end of world war ii, the u.s. dropped atomic bombs on hiroshima and nagasaki. as many as 246,000 people died. now one japanese woman fears she's about to witness her second nuclear nightmare. >> so right now i'm making the wings. if you could fold 1,000 origami birds then you could recover from the illness, and that's the symbol of longevity and happiness in japan. >> couric: ritsuko komaki was two when an atomic bomb dropped on hiroshima. she and her family lived 200 miles away, but many of her relatives perished and her grandmother became terribly ill. >> her hair fell off and she had a nose bleed. but sh
move us all to a better place. and caltrate moves us. caltrate knows 80% of us don't get the calcium we need. and when we don't, our bodies steal it from our bones. caltrate helps put it back. with 1200 mg of calcium and 800 iu of vitamin d. women need caltrate. caltrate helps women keep moving because women move the world. >> couric: no one knows the destructive power of nuclear radiation better than the japanese. 65 years ago at the end of world war ii, the u.s. dropped atomic bombs on...
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Mar 24, 2011
03/11
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, because a lot of people have denied us, you know, wouldn't help us. so she was there. >> reporter: in the 1980's declining health was only part of the problem that came with an aids diagnosis. >> if you had aids you were pretty much just shunned. >> reporter: taylor fought that stigma, says the doctor who treated her friend and costar, rock hudson, who died of aids. >> she knew in her heart that we would never get anywhere against this until we got a handle on the prejudice. >> reporter: michael smithwick, the executive director of maitri and h.i.v. positive himself for 30 years, remembers vividly how he felt when elizabeth taylor first took a stand for people like him. >> it was a sense of elation, and a sense of finally, finally someone has stepped forward and spoken to truth. and done so in a very brave way. >> reporter: it was perhaps the most dramatic act in a life that had plenty of drama. john blackstone, cbs news, san francisco. >> couric: and that's the "cbs evening news" for tonight. i'm katie couric. thanks for watching. i'll see you tomorr
, because a lot of people have denied us, you know, wouldn't help us. so she was there. >> reporter: in the 1980's declining health was only part of the problem that came with an aids diagnosis. >> if you had aids you were pretty much just shunned. >> reporter: taylor fought that stigma, says the doctor who treated her friend and costar, rock hudson, who died of aids. >> she knew in her heart that we would never get anywhere against this until we got a handle on the...
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Mar 16, 2011
03/11
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what can you tell us about that? >> well, there have been some questions that have been raised for a while about the integrity of their containment vessels. but i think there's actually a bigger safety issue here. i think the question that's raised, both in japan and in the whole of the rest of the world, is whether the so-called design basis for reactors is sufficient. have we correctly predicted the size of natural disasters or man made disasters to which they might be subject? >> couric: what about the 140,000 people who have been told to stay inside and not evacuate? what are the health risks to them? >> well, right now with the numbers that we have, those numbers are not good. i mean, it's not good to be in that area. but being inside really does cut down the exposure significantly. it's a good policy that they're telling them. >> couric: all right. james acton and cham dallas, gentlemen, thank you both. >> thank you. >> thank you for having me here. >> couric: meanwhile, rescue and relief workers have no choice
what can you tell us about that? >> well, there have been some questions that have been raised for a while about the integrity of their containment vessels. but i think there's actually a bigger safety issue here. i think the question that's raised, both in japan and in the whole of the rest of the world, is whether the so-called design basis for reactors is sufficient. have we correctly predicted the size of natural disasters or man made disasters to which they might be subject? >>...
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Mar 23, 2011
03/11
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"they kept telling us the plant was safe but they were leading us on all this time." and yet anger and bitterness are not the operative emotions here. hope and empathy are. she says "if getting angry would make things better or make us happier then we would. but instead of getting mad, it's better to help each other out." "we have to stay focused on the recovery" says this mother of two. "that's what we're all thinking about." these are the survivors. it's estimated more than 20,000 others will not have been so lucky. amazing grace... ♪ >> reporter: so kindness and cooperation are the anthem of strength. the saving grace of refugees whose ordeal has really just begun. lucy craft, cbs news, tokyo. >> couric: more now from our new cbs news poll out tonight. about half of americans say they're concerned about radiation from japan reaching the united states. about seven out of ten say they believe nuclear power plants here in the u.s. are generally safe but more than six in ten don't want one built near where they live. and 58% say the u.s. government is not prepared fo
"they kept telling us the plant was safe but they were leading us on all this time." and yet anger and bitterness are not the operative emotions here. hope and empathy are. she says "if getting angry would make things better or make us happier then we would. but instead of getting mad, it's better to help each other out." "we have to stay focused on the recovery" says this mother of two. "that's what we're all thinking about." these are the survivors....
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Mar 29, 2011
03/11
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time to face the pollen that used to make me sneeze. but with zyrtec® liquid gels, i get fast, 24-hour allergy relief. so i feel better by the time we tee off. zyrtec® liquid gels work fast, so i can love the air®. >> mitchell: it is a decision of a lifetime-- to open your heart and your home to adopt a child. an emotional choice that one alleged con artist may have exploited to scam would be parents. she promised them her babies, but all they got was heartache-- until she was tracked down by cbs news chief investigative correspondent armen keteyian. >> want to go get it? go get it. >> reporter: holly and mark gonzales tried for four frustrating years to have children. >> good boy! >> reporter: costing the couple about $120,000. then last month came a call from their adoption attorney. >> she said "we have a birth mom who's pregnant with twins due next friday." >> reporter: their attorney put holly on the phone with the expectant mother who said her name was kristy bennett, a 34- year-old single mother of three from missouri. >> a ha
time to face the pollen that used to make me sneeze. but with zyrtec® liquid gels, i get fast, 24-hour allergy relief. so i feel better by the time we tee off. zyrtec® liquid gels work fast, so i can love the air®. >> mitchell: it is a decision of a lifetime-- to open your heart and your home to adopt a child. an emotional choice that one alleged con artist may have exploited to scam would be parents. she promised them her babies, but all they got was heartache-- until she was tracked...